FAQ Page

How do I return an item?

We gladly accept returns within 30 days for new, resalable items and we do not charge a restocking fee. You can request a refund, store credit, or exchange your item for another. Please contact us for more information.

If you wish to cancel your order, you must do so before the order is shipped. We normally ship within 24 hours of receiving your order.

What methods of shipping do you use?

We ship from California via the following methods:

UPS - Ground, 3-Day Select, Second-Day-Air, Next-Day-Air

USPS - First Class Mail, Priority Mail, Express Mail

Notes:

UPS Ground can take 1 to 5 business days for US domestic addresses. (1-2 business days within California).Domestic Priority Mail can take 2-3 business days. Express Mail can take 1-2 business days and weekend delivery is available to most destinations in the US.

We accept international orders, Global Priority usually arrives in about 1 week but can be delayed in Customs.Global Express should arrive within 2 days unless delayed by Customs.

Will you sell my information?

Will the sticky-pads on your car emblems damage my car's surface?

If you are concerned about the sticky pads on the backs of our emblems marring the surface of your car when you remove them, read on.

The adhesive is "permanent" in the sense that it will not disintegrate and cause your favorite car emblem to fall off on the highway somewhere. Most reports we've had of lost car emblems describe forced removal by disrespectful folks who disagree with what they think a car emblem means. As long as the car emblem is not forceably removed, and the underlying surface is in good condition there is no cause for worry.

To correctly liberate a car emblem from an automobile's painted surface

This procedure assumes that the underlying surface is in good condition (meaning you didn't attach your car emblem to a primer-only surface or cracked and peeling paint, etc. ;).

Get some rubber cement thinner, some cotton swabs or an eye-dropper, and a rag.

1. Hold the rag against the surface below the site where your emblem is attached to catch drips. Dip a cotton swab or the eye-dropper in rubber cement thinner and dab it (or dribble it) around the top and behind the attached emblem. Try to saturate the area between the emblem and the surface where the emblem is attached. Catch any thinner run-off with the rag.

2. After a few minutes, try to gently rock the emblem off the surface. It should come of reasonably easily. If not, soak it with some more rubber cement thinner.

3. Once the emblem has been removed, saturate any sticky-pad residue with more rubber cement thinner. You should be able to wipe it all off.

Optional: remove sticky-pad residue from the back of your newly liberated car emblem. If you remove it, you can re-apply the emblem to another surface with your own sticky-pad material. You can get it at most variety and hardware stores.

What's up with that strange skeleton/fish/pirate symbol on some of your products?

The IPU is commonly used to highlight the perceived fallacious or arbitrary nature of supernatural beliefs by, for example, replacing the word "God" in any theistic statement with "Invisible Pink Unicorn".A quote from the alt.atheismFAQ sums up this use of the Invisible Pink Unicorn:

The point of this silliness is to prod the theist into
remembering that their preaching is likely to be viewed by atheists as
having all the credibility and seriousness of [the atheists'] preaching
about the IPU...

It is accepted that there are no actual believers in this mock goddess, but it has become popular, especially on atheist
web sites and on-line discussion forums, to feign belief in her both
for the sake of humor and as a form of critique or satire of theistic
belief. These professions of faith also serve to demonstrate the difficulty of refuting avowals of belief in phenomena outside human perception.